Can Indirect Herbicide Exposure Modify the Response of the Colorado Potato Beetle to an Organophosphate Insecticide?

J Econ Entomol

Centre of Excellence in Biological Interactions Research, Department of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Jyväskylä, FI, Finland.

Published: September 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Organisms, like the Colorado potato beetle, are affected by multiple environmental stressors, particularly in agricultural settings where pesticides are used.
  • The study examined how indirect exposure to glyphosate-based herbicides (GBH) interacts with an insecticide and its impact on beetle survival, gene expression, and oxidative stress biomarkers.
  • Results showed that while GBH did not affect larval survival, it reduced the expression of a target gene for the insecticide, suggesting an antagonistic relationship, while also causing a synergistic decrease in oxidative status biomarker scores when both stressors were present.

Article Abstract

Organisms live in complex multivariate environments. In agroecosystems, this complexity is often human-induced as pest individuals can be exposed to many xenobiotics simultaneously. Predicting the effects of multiple stressors can be problematic, as two or more stressors can have interactive effects. Our objective was to investigate whether indirect glyphosate-based herbicide (GBH) exposure of the host plant has interactive effects in combination with an insecticide (azinphos-methyl) on an invasive pest Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say). We tested the effects of GBH and insecticide on the survival, insecticide target genes expression (acetylcholinesterase genes) and oxidative status biomarkers (glutathione S-transferase [GST], glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase [G6PDH], glutathione reductase homolog [GR], glutathione peroxidase homolog [GPx], total glutathione [totGSH], glutathione reduced-oxidized [GSH: GSSG], catalase [CAT], superoxide dismutase [SOD], lipid hydroperoxides). We found that exposure to indirect GBH has no single or interactive effects in combination with the insecticide on larval survival. However, prior exposure to GBH inhibits Ldace1 gene expression by 0.55-fold, which is the target site for the organophosphate and carbamate insecticides. This difference disappears when individuals are exposed to both GBH and insecticide, suggesting an antagonistic effect. On the other hand, oxidative status biomarker scores (PCAs of GPx, GR, and CAT) were decreased when exposed to both stressors, indicating a synergistic effect. Overall, we found that indirect GBH exposure can have both antagonistic and synergistic effects in combination with an insecticide, which should be considered when aiming for an ecologically relevant risk assessment of multiple human-induced stressors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jee/toz115DOI Listing

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